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Could Secondary DNA Transfer Falsely Place Someone at the Scene of a Crime?

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 2016

Authors

Journal

Journal of Forensic Sciences


Study Design

Addressed Question

secondary transfer under maximum chance conditions using modern DNA detection and amplification methods

Activity Context

Social ContactStabbing

Category

Transfer Scenario

Specifications

Individual CharacteristicsSurfaceTransfer via Handshake

Variables of Interest

secondary substrates

Stringency of Control

Controlled

Number of Individuals

12

Replicates per Individual and Condition

1

Nucleic Acid

DNA

Bodily Origin

skin (hands)

Depositor & Contact

Depositor Characteristics

N/A

Criteria for Shedder Status

N/A

Previous Activities

N/A

Contact Scenario

handwashing - wearing gloves for 1.5 hours - handshake - gripping knife - sampling

Primary Substrate

Primary Substrate Type

body part: hands

Primary Substrate Material

Skin

Deposit

vigorous handshake 2min

Delay

N/A

Secondary Substrate

Secondary Substrate Type

plastic knife handle, textured or smooth

Secondary Substrate Material

Plastic

Secondary Substrate Contact

handling 2 min

Further Transfer

N/A

Sampling

Background DNA on Sampled Surface

Negative (Confirmed)

Sampling Time

direct

Persistence

N/A

Sampling Method

Swabbing (wet)

Sampling Area

entire knife handle surface

Laboratory Analysis

Extraction

Qiagen DNA Purification from Buccal Swabs Spin Protocol, final volume: 150 µl, after quantification, concentration into 15 µ using Viacom 500s Hydrostat membranes

DNA Quantification

Quantifiler Human DNA Quantification kit (Applied Biosystems)

Input for Profiling

10 µl or 1.5 ng

Profiling

Identifiler Plus Amplification kit, AB 3130xI (Applied Biosystems), 5 and 10s injections at 3kv, GeneMapper ID v 3.2.1; AT: 50 rfu, ST: 200 rfu

Reference Samples

taken from all participants and lab personnel

Profile Interpretation and Mixture Analysis

casework analysis (as if contributors were not known) to determine whether profiles were suitable for statistical calculations, mixture deconvolution based on peak height ratios and subsequent comparison to reference profiles

RNA Data Interpretation

N/A

Results

DNA Quantity

0-1.79 ng

Profile Quality

single source (2 cases), possible mixture, two person mixture, at least two person mixture, greater than two person mixture, major/minor mixture, indistinguishable mixture -> mostly mixtures attributable to participants

Parameter Used for Comparison

DNA yield, profile composition (minimum number of persons, observed alleles from known contributors, discriminating power)

Summary of Results

secondary transfer was detected in 85 % of samples; additional foreign alleles present even as a major component in one case; the secondary depositor can be major or single contributor (20%), in several cases the analysis was affected/complicated by secondary transfer; interindividual difference in DNA deposition; no significant difference between knife handle surfaces

Raised Questions

N/A

Cautionary Remarks

maximum chance conditions due to handwashing, wearing gloves, vigorous handshaking and precleaning knife handle; overestimation of secondary transfer due to the profile interpretation approach, but detailed results table shown; A more casework-relevant profile interpretation approach is also described in the methods section, but the results are not shown (cf. Commentary by Kokshoorn et al. (2016) and author's response (2016))